BlueAnt Wireless has introduced the BlueAnt Supertooth Light Bluetooth Speakerphone. The new Supertooth Light is the latest addition to its handsfree speakerphone technology offering stylish design, easy to use features and no installation requirements.
The Supertooth Light comes with features such as digital Sound Processor (DSP) for noise & echo cancellation , up to 15 hrs talk-time or 800 hrs standby and full duplex, vent mounted cell phone holder, wall and car charging options and a high performance speaker. The Supertooth Light supports multi-pairing to 5 Bluetooth devices, voice dial activation, redial and call reject.
The new Supertooth Light integrates advanced technology including Clear Voice Capture (CVC) and Digital Signal Processor (DSP) from Cambridge Silicon Radio (CSR) to help achieve its outstanding audio qualities.
CVC separates the voice signals of interest from other sounds in the environment and applies acoustic echo cancellation and noise suppression to the incoming and outgoing voices, allowing the Supertooth light to sharply enhance voice communication.
"The Supertooth Light uses real-time audio to process any echo or background noise resulting in the improvement of the sound quality of the user's voice, regardless of whether the car is stationery or traveling at high speed,” said BlueAnt Wireless Senior Vice President, Peter George in a statement to the press. “It also adjusts sound levels to compensate for loud engine noise or external noise created when the windows are wound down."
Niladri Sekhar Nath is a contributing writer for TMCnet covering telecommunications, service providers and networking. Bluetooth | X | This technology achieves its goal by embedding tiny, inexpensive, short-range transceivers into the mobile devices that are available today, either directly or through an adapter device such as a PC C...more |
Echo cancellation | X | Echo is the reflection of the original back to the sender. Electrical echo is generated when the incoming signal voltage from the destination speaker is reflected back toward the speaker as a slightly...more |
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